Soissons enters
written history under its
Celtic name, later borrowed into
Latin,
Noviodunum, meaning "new hillfort", which was the capital of the
Suessiones. At
Roman contact, it was a town of the
Suessiones, mentioned by
Julius Caesar (
B. G. ii. 12). Caesar (
B.C. 57), after leaving the Axona (modern
Aisne), entered the territory of the Suessiones, and making one day's long march, reached Noviodunum, which was surrounded by a high wall and a broad ditch. The place surrendered to Caesar. From 457 to 486, under
Aegidius and his son
Syagrius, Noviodunum was the capital of the
Kingdom of Soissons, until it fell to the
Frankish king
Clovis I in 486 after the
Battle of Soissons. Part of the Frankish territory of
Neustria, the Soissons region, and the
Abbey of Saint-Médard, founded in the sixth century, played an important political part during the rule of the
Merovingian dynasty (447–751). After the death of
Clovis I in 511, Soissons was made the capital of one of the four kingdoms into which his states were divided. Eventually, the kingdom of Soissons disappeared in 613 when the Frankish lands were amalgamated under
Chlothar II. The
744 Council of Soissons met at the instigation of
Pepin the Short and
Saint Boniface, the Pope's missionary to pagan Germany, secured the condemnation of the Frankish bishop
Adalbert and the missionary
Clement of Ireland. During the
Hundred Years' War, French forces committed a notorious massacre of English archers stationed at the town's garrison, in which many of the French townsfolk were themselves raped and killed. The massacre of French citizens by French soldiers shocked Europe; Henry V of England, noting that the town of Soissons was dedicated to the saints
Crispin and Crispinian, claimed to avenge the honour of the saints when he met the French forces at the
Battle of Agincourt on
Saint Crispin's Day 1415. The town was liberated by French troops under the command of
Joan of Arc on 23 July 1429. Between June 1728 and July 1729 it hosted the
Congress of Soissons an attempt to resolve a long-standing series of disputes between the
Kingdom of Great Britain and
Spain which had spilled over into the
Anglo-Spanish War of 1727–1729. The Congress was largely successful and led to the signing of the
Treaty of Seville between them. In the
Franco-Prussian War, the town was
sieged by the
Prussians for over a month and culminated in French surrender in October 1870. During
World War I, the city came under heavy bombardment. There was mutiny after the disastrous
Chemin des Dames offensive at the
Second Battle of the Aisne. A statue erected with images of French soldiers killed in action in 1917 is behind the St Peter's Church, next to the Soissons Courthouse. ==Sights==